RE: Computer backups

From: Gabriel A. Couriel (gcouriel@bellsouth.net)
Date: Wed Dec 14 2005 - 08:21:28 EST


for josh: as per the rebate, "Rebate subject to product availability and
the following terms and conditions:
1. One rebate will be issued per SKU per household. 2."

you're good to go!

Gabriel Couriel

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net
[mailto:owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net]On Behalf Of Jason
Bleazard
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 8:35 PM
To: dakota-truck@dakota-truck.net
Subject: Re: DML: Computer backups

On Tue, December 13, 2005 11:03 am, Jason A Banta said:
>
> For home backups, there are plenty of alternatives out there. The
> prices have come way down in price as of recently also. For example,
> you can get a Buffalo TeraStation 1TB NAS HD-H1.0TGL/R5 Terabyte for
> under a thousand dollars now.

Nice, but, ummm... I think your definition of "home" budget is a bit
different
from mine :-). I figure 4 250G drives at $90 each is $360 (less than that
with the rebate deal Josh found), plus about $40 for a controller card is
$400
for 1T unformatted capacity. Put it all in one of the leftover cases I've
recycled out of the trash pile, and spend about $50 on an old motherboard,
CPU
and memory on eBay, and I'd be good to go. I might even be able to rescue a
motherboard out of the trash pile as well, although I'm not sure what the
real
math requirements are for RAID5. I keep reading "oh NOES you can't do RAID
on
anything less than dual 3GHz CPUs!!!" but I'm running a RAID1 on a Duron 850
that never breaks a sweat. I'm aware that RAID5 is more compute intensive
than RAID1, but I'm not sure exactly how much more.

Anyway, just some ramblings from one of your resident computer packrats.

--
Jason Bleazard  http://drazaelb.blogspot.com  Burlington, Ontario
his:  '95 Dakota Sport 4x4, 3.9 V6, 5spd, Reg. Cab, white
hers: '01 Dakota Sport 4x4, 4.7 V8, Auto, Quad Cab, black



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